The reveal of Hoyoverse’s new game “Varsapura” has triggered a strong reaction across the community. In Spanish speaking circles, many players jokingly nicknamed the title “Vergadura S”, turning it into a meme while they vent their skepticism about Hoyoverse’s long term strategy. Behind the jokes, the mood is serious. Fans worry that Varsapura is just another test bed in a growing “beta factory,” focused more on gacha monetization and data collection than on delivering a radically new experience that respects player time and investment.
A recurring point in community discussions is the downward popularity trend of Hoyoverse’s recent releases. Honkai Star Rail launched with good numbers but never reached the cultural impact of Genshin Impact. Zenless Zone Zero (ZZZ) arrived with even less reach and lower long term visibility. Now, many expect Varsapura to follow the same curve. Good first week, a lot of content creator coverage, then a slow fade as players discover familiar systems, similar gacha structures and the usual live service grind. In this context, the meme name “Vergadura S” reflects a kind of defensive humor. People laugh about it because they do not really believe it will change the rules of the game.
At the center of the criticism is Genshin Impact itself. Players argue that Genshin is still the main economic pillar that keeps Hoyoverse alive, both in revenue and in global brand recognition. Given that reality, they question why Genshin has not consistently received the level of “love” and investment that a giant IP deserves. They point to contentious choices such as pushing unpopular modes like Miliastra, releasing what they describe as one of the most “empty” versions in the game’s history and allowing visible drops in player activity. The logic is simple. If the flagship is not treated with maximum care, why should anyone expect more effort for Varsapura or any future project.
The conversation expands to the broader gacha and live service ecosystem. Many describe the current market as a swarm of anime style games chasing the same limited audience. Titles that arrive hyped as “the next Genshin killer” often vanish quietly once the honeymoon period ends. Tower of Fantasy is the classic example. It briefly drew attention as a rival, only to lose momentum when Genshin responded with Golden Apple Archipelago 2.0, Sumeru and a new element. Players predict that Varsapura will land in this same crowded space, fighting for time against Genshin, Star Rail, ZZZ and other competitors that already demand daily logins and constant grinding.
There is also a strong emotional component. Some players feel trapped in a toxic loop. They are frustrated with Genshin’s design and monetization, then transfer their hopes to the next title. First Star Rail, then ZZZ, now Varsapura, previously mocked as “Vergadura S.” When each game fails to surpass Genshin in generosity, content pacing or innovation, they drift back to Teyvat, disappointed but still attached by sunk cost and five years of progress. According to this view, the live service gacha model is already burned out. It keeps moving mainly through habit, fear of missing out and big marketing pushes, not genuine excitement.
Even so, there is a small streak of cautious optimism. Some fans say they would happily support Varsapura if Hoyoverse finally broke its own pattern. Suggestions include a less exploitative gacha, a stronger focus on one or two core titles instead of a whole “beta zoo” and clearer promises about long term support. Names like Nexus Anima or Azur Promilia appear in conversations as hypothetical projects that could work, if the studio dared to move away from strict copies of the Genshin formula. The problem, in the eyes of many, is that internal data and profit incentives will always push back toward the same monetization structures and content loops.
For now, the dominant narrative around Varsapura is cautious to outright negative. Players who joke about “Vergadura S” also warn that they will not commit to another Hoyoverse game unless early reviews and long term updates prove that this project is genuinely different from Genshin Impact, Honkai Star Rail and Zenless Zone Zero. Others admit that curiosity will make them install Varsapura at launch, but they plan to stay strictly free to play or low spending, with very low expectations about the grind. Until Hoyoverse delivers a title that truly steps outside the usual anime gacha live service mold, Varsapura will be seen as just one more experiment in a market that many already consider saturated.







